OXON HILL, Md. — Bruhat Soma insisted he was nervous during the idle hours as he waited to take the Scripps National Spelling Bee stage, and he felt even more pressure to perform given that he hadn't lost a spelling bee in eight months.
He never showed any nerves in front of the microphone, though, and when the bee abruptly went to a lightning-round tiebreaker known as a ''spell-off,'' he could not have been more comfortable.
The 12-year-old seventh-grader from Tampa, Florida, blitzed through 30 words in 90 seconds Thursday night, sounding more like an auctioneer than the best speller in the English language, and judges determined that he spelled 29 of them correctly — nine more than his competitor, Faizan Zaki. As the champion, Bruhat receives a trophy and more than $50,000 in cash and prizes.
He rehearsed the spell-off every day for six months.
''I was pretty confident that I had a chance at winning because I've been working so hard,'' Bruhat said, explaining his rationale for spending so much time on a tiebreaker he might not even need. ''And I really wanted to win. That's why I practiced the spell-off so much.''
Had he known the way Scripps would conduct the final rounds, he might have spent even more time on his speed training. There was no doubt Bruhat was a worthy champion, but the conclusion left many observers disappointed and confused.
''I don't think it was a good bee,'' said Dev Shah, last year's champion. ''It's not about spelling as many words as you can in 90 seconds. That's not what the spelling bee is.''
The finals began with eight spellers, the fewest since 2010, and it was clear that Scripps was trying to fill the 2-hour broadcast window on Ion, a network owned by the Cincinnati-based media company. Frequent, lengthy commercial breaks allowed spellers to mill about at the side of the stage, chatting with their coaches, relatives and supporters.